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Friday Find: Stamps by Abstract Expressionists

Sometimes email just doesn’t cut it and you need to send a good ol‘ fashion handwritten letter. Pretty stationary is a must, but what about the stamp? A colorful, fun stamp is also a nice touch.

So when I saw these beauties, I knew I needed to share them with you. Earlier this month, the USPS released a 44–cent, Abstract Expressionists commemorative stamp in ten beautiful designs. In the 1940s and 1950s abstract expressionists, based in NYC for the most part, pushed the US front and center of the international art scene.

In celebration of the abstract expressionist artists of the 20th Century, Art Director Ethel Kessler and noted Art Historian Jonathan Fineberg (Gutgsell Professor Art History, University of Illinois at UrbanaChampaign) selected the ten paintings featured. I thought it was so clever that the arrangement of the stamps suggests paintings hanging on a gallery wall.

The following artwork and artists are showcased:

•The Golden Wall (1961) — Hans Hofmann (1880–1966)
•Romanesque Façade (1949) — Adolph Gottlieb (1903–1974)
•Orange and Yellow (1956) — Mark Rothko (1903–1970)
•The Liver Is the Cock’s Comb (1944) — Arshile Gorky (1904–1948)
•1948–C (1948) — Clyfford Still (1904–1980)
Asheville (1948) — Willem de Kooning (1904–1997)
•Achilles (1952) — Barnett Newman (1905–1970)
•Convergence (1952) — Jackson Pollock (1912–1956)
•Elegy to the Spanish Republic No. 34 (1953–1954) — Robert Motherwell (1915–1991)
•La Grande Vallée 0 (1983) — Joan Mitchell (1925–1992)

I picked up a sheet of these colorful stamps today. Do you like them too?

*images courtesy of art.com, Hans Hofmann and USPS

If you’d like to use or publish any photos or material from this site, please contact me, credit Simplified Bee™ and kindly link back to this blog.

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Read full story By on March 26, 2010 in friday find, original artwork

Chic Equestrian Style in Home Decor

It was a recent post by High-Heeled Foot in the Door regarding her love for elephants and a missed opportunity at a lamp that made me think about what I love to collect and display. My mother and grandmother’s love for all things equestrian got me first hooked on horses. You may recall from this post, that a gorgeous Imperial horse oil painting by my grandmother hangs in my home. I have several other smaller horse figures and items, but have naturally been eyeing this reproduction ceramic Tang Dynasty horse at Gump’s for some time.

Although around for hundreds of years, it was Ralph Lauren who mainstreamed the equestrian style in our homes. With its origins from the English countryside, leather upholstery with nailhead and substantial dark-wood furnishings come to mind. However, today’s designers are incorporating the love of horses more subtly and in a variety of design styles.

Designer William Hodgins installed dark wood paneling in his Virginia home’s family room {via House Beautiful}. A large equestrian painting pulls our attention. It is mixed with a Niermann Weeks game table and a sofa covered in soft blue Edelman leather and an antique French mantel.

In this Malibu, California home by architect Steven Giannetti and designer Madeline Stuart, the homeowners also communicate their love for horses in original artwork in this elegant living room.

Style at Home editor Erin McLaughlin has also incorporated her love for horses in her home’s interior design. The dreamy portraits of her Oldenburg-cross gelding by artist friend Jenn Pratt are hung in her simple, but elegant entry.

This beautiful living room via Desire to Inspire has a chic, modern equestrian feel with antlers on the coffee table and a stunning horse painting. Photograph by Moris Moreno.

Boston’s Christine Lane Interiors captures a contemporary equestrian feel in this bedroom by including a large black & white photograph of a family of horses.

New York-based designer Amanda Nisbet stacks colorful jockey and horse racing posters beside the desk in this bedroom.

Designer Scott Sanders incorporated horse prints and drawings in the salon-style arrangement on the stairway wall in this new house in the heart of New Jersey’s horse country. {photo via House Beautiful}

In the Kentucky getaway {hallway above} of New York fashion designers Mark Badgley and James Mischka, the decor is kept simple with mostly bare floors and no window treatments. Most of the home is painted in Sherwin-Williams’s Modern Gray. The cool color is balanced with the various warm wood tones throughout the space. As Mischka states in Elle Decor, “We’ve never really been comfortable with color in our homes,” he says. “We work with it so much in our business that we like a clean palette where we live.”

The Badgley Mischka home is beautifully done in the equestrian style without going overboard. Here in the guest bedroom the furnishings are, not surprisingly, vintage Ralph Lauren.

Do you love a particular animal enough to incorporate it in your interior design?

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Read full story By on March 1, 2010 in interior design, original artwork

Stars by Robert Frost and Sweet Dream Etchings by Gabriele Schwibach

Stars by Robert Frost

How countlessly they congregate
O’er our tumultuous snow,
Which flows in shapes as tall as trees
When wintry winds do blow!–

As if with keeness for our fate,
Our faltering few steps on
To white rest, and a place of rest
Invisible at dawn,–

And yet with neither love nor hate,
Those starts like some snow-white
Minerva’s snow-white marble eyes
Without the gift of sight.

Dreamy etchings by San Francisco Bay Area artist, Gabriele Schwibach. You can view more of her beautiful artwork here. Wishing you a happy Sunday!

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Read full story By on September 20, 2009 in original artwork

Tips on Decorating the Fireplace Mantel

Even when not in use, a fireplace is a natural focal point in a room that can’t be ignored. Decorating the fireplace mantel is a wonderful place to incorporate your room’s overall design scheme. Determining what décor is going to be showcased and how is often a challenge for many homeowners. Here are a few tips to help you determine what look is right for your space.

The first step is to select décor that will convey the kind of feeling you want the room to have – formal, casual, clean lines/minimalist or eclectic/busy. You will need to work with the fireplace’s existing architecture and decide if you’d like to enhance it or subdue it. Another important consideration when decorating a fireplace mantel is to keep the design balanced and proportional.

Symmetrical design is the most popular way to decorate a fireplace mantel. Formal rooms typically follow symmetry when arranging mantel décor, but it works in a more casual setting as well. In this master bedroom above, the fireplace mantel by Norman Davenport Askins is symmetrically decorated with British 19th century botanical prints centered on the wall and antique Chinese vases on either side.

Symmetry is easy on the eye and conveys a sense of calm throughout this formal living room designed by Dana Lyon. The fireplace mantel is also symmetrically designed with original artwork flanked by candlesticks.

Dallas, Texas-based designer Shannon Bowers created a gorgeous living room in a neutral palette collection of European furnishings and accessories. The Louis XV inspired limestone mantel is also decorated symmetrically. The large mirror is in perfect proportion and nicely balanced by vases of fresh pink roses.

 

An asymmetrical layout is another way to arrange your mantel. It conveys a less formal and more rigid feeling, yet still requires balance to achieve an aesthetic design. Objects on both sides of the mantel can vary, but should still be proportional – in the center you may have a mirror with a set of smaller candlesticks on one side and a single taller vase on the other.

 

The fireplace mantel (above) in this Normandy-style house in Atlanta decorated by Suzanne Kasler demonstrates an asymmetrical design. A dreamy mixed-media work on wood and Plexiglas by Dusty Griffith is centered over the fireplace and is flanked by a tall candlestick and smaller crystal figurines. The powder blue pair of 19th-century painted bergères in the Louis XVI style are divine and further emphasizes the room’s fireplace focal point.

 

Designed by Stephen Shubel, this living room’s fireplace mantel is also asymmetrical. Gorgeous 19th-century girandoles sit on either side of the mirror by Two’s Company. Alone these items would be symmetrical, however Shubel brilliantly adds a pair of seashells on one side and a small bird figurine on the other. On another note, the walls painted in Benjamin Moore’s Bridal Pink and perfectly balanced by the deep browns in the room. I particularly like the Hanna chairs in leather flank from Oly.

 

Another option is to create an eclectic mantel by displaying décor of varying size. If this is the look you are trying to achieve, it is still important to arrange the objects to ensure it has balance and flow.

In this contemporary sitting room designed by Eric Cohler, the mantel decor is busy, but inviting. It showcases an eclectic mix of art and photography in various sizes and frames. The small sculpture centered on the mantle is a critical element that balances out the frames. This busy style works here because the room already has lots of visual activity throughout, like the Han dynasty figurines atop the gilded bookshelves. Cohler also brings some old world charm by adding an antique English fireplace grate. I must say, the macassar ebony klismos-style chair by Hinson & Company is fabulous!

This mantel in this casual living room designed by Cristine Gillespie is also eclectic. The 1930s Eiffel Tower model on the mantel is from Indigo Seas. Gillespie and her sons made the small silver one from an Erector set and magnets.

Some fireplaces may have little or no mantel. This is most common in contemporary design. If you do not have a mantel simply hang art or a mirror centered above the fireplace to draw your eye up. However, you may decide to keep the space bare especially if you have a stunning stone fireplace that you don’t want to detract from. In either instance keeping the mantel decor minimalistic will convey a sense of calm and order.
In the contemporary living room by Shirley Parks Design (above), artwork was hung off center and a pair of simple white vases were added to balance out the look.
Before hanging artwork or mirrors above your mantel, it is best if you play around with different designs to find what arrangement works best for you and your room. Have fun with it!

 

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Read full story By on September 18, 2009 in Design Tips, home accessories, interior design, living rooms, mantels, original artwork